The short version of this message is that I wonder why so few companies seem to have had speedsters in the Golden Age. I know there are some, of course, but once you get away from DC and Marvel, for a character concept generally acknowledged to be so primal, they're really obscure and rarely taken seriously. Red Robbins? Dash Dartwell? Zippo!? C'mon.
So, am I missing characters (yeah, Silver Streak and MAYBE Quicksilver) or is there some reason for the gaping hole in most lineups?
So that's the short version. Longer...
I can remember back when I first got some insight into DC's Multiverse idea, and I would have looseleaf paper folded over into columns (what, I'm going to spend a day figuring out whatever third-rate spreadsheet we had for the Commodore 64? And think about comic books in the living room!?), where I dutifully filled out each column with characters known on that Earth, then not only tried to find the most appropriate counterparts (tempting though it may be, the announcer on the Superfriends was NOT the Earth-1 counterpart for Starman), but tried to extrapolate out to the Crime Syndicate's Earth-3 and beyond.
Yeah. I thought that the writers were working from a predictable system, and not making stuff up as they went along. What can I say? I was young and naive.
Anyway, I recently caught the bug again when I was looking at DC's Golden Age especially, and started to see a lot of similarities between the National and All-American lines. Sure, it might be a small stretch to say that Wonder Woman is the answer to Superman (though it does explain why DC has never figured out what to do with her), but Dr. Mid-Nite even looks like Batman (with some Robin influence in the tunic), Johnny Quick has the Flash, Hawkman has the Shining Knight, Dr. Fate has Sargon, and so forth--there are very few major characters from either side of the fence without a somewhat prominent reflection.
And that makes some sense, because the heroes do typically represent archetypes from other media, so I started looking at the other companies, figuring this should be a breeze. And in a lot of cases, it is. More than one were defeated by the mighty injunction, but in the same class as Superman and Wonder Woman, you have Quality's Wonder Boy, Fox's Wonder Man, most of Fawcett's lineup, but mostly Master Man, and Dell's Supermind and Son. Mister Scarlet isn't quite the dark-clad avenger that Batman is, but Dell's Owl sure is, as is Quality's Raven. Black Condor and Bulletman hit the Hawkman button, and Bulletman even brings his girlfriend along.
But where the heck are the speedsters? Fawcett has the obligatory mystic (El Carim), the archer (Golden Arrow), and even the guy who can create stuff at will (Diamond Jack), plus a couple of patriotic-themed characters, which DC has conspicuously lacked. But they don't have a speedster. Quality might have Quicksilver, but I don't think I've read a story where I was convinced he had any powers.
And that seems odd, since--as I mention before--everyone seems to agree it's an obvious idea that has direct appeal to kids. It exaggerates something kids like to do (run) and tells adventure stories around it. And yet, it seems like once you get away from the Flash and Johnny Quick, the pickings are mighty slim, limited to...uhm...Silver Streak. I mean, would we know who the Whizzer was if Roy Thomas didn't bring him back in seven different contexts...? Or would he have all the recognition of Red Robbins?
What? We're out of colors.